Why do you say that?Anyway, given recent events, we're not likely to read anything MU-related for a while now anywayso it's not like this is going to be put to the test...
Maybe the "recent event" he's talking about the publication of the 2010 schedule which doesn't show any MU books this year.![]()
If I'm not mistaken nobody has said it is a non-starter, just that it hasn't been approved yet. Big Difference.And since Rise Like Lions turned out to be a non-starter.(That's what I was referring to when I mentioned "recent events".)
You know I just realized something. Star Trek Online can't be the future of Trek lit for one very important reason
Risa was razed during the Borg invasion and there is no way it would take just 30 years to get te planet back to resort status after everything on the surface being reduced to ash.
If I'm not mistaken nobody has said it is a non-starter, just that it hasn't been approved yet. Big Difference.And since Rise Like Lions turned out to be a non-starter.(That's what I was referring to when I mentioned "recent events".)
You know I just realized something. Star Trek Online can't be the future of Trek lit for one very important reason
Risa was razed during the Borg invasion and there is no way it would take just 30 years to get te planet back to resort status after everything on the surface being reduced to ash.
Perhaps...nature is more hardy than you'd think....
Even considering the destruction of the Borg, live would still survive on Risa, in some form or other--perhaps as bacteria in the soil.
You know I just realized something. Star Trek Online can't be the future of Trek lit for one very important reason
Risa was razed during the Borg invasion and there is no way it would take just 30 years to get te planet back to resort status after everything on the surface being reduced to ash.
Perhaps...nature is more hardy than you'd think....
Not when there is literally no life to be left on the planet and the entire biosphere has been turned to radioactive glass.
No, Destiny was quite clear on this: All organic life is exterminated when the Borg razed any given planet. The planes themselves were turned into radioactive balls of glass. Period.Even considering the destruction of the Borg, live would still survive on Risa, in some form or other--perhaps as bacteria in the soil.
No, Destiny was quite clear on this: All organic life is exterminated when the Borg razed any given planet. The planes themselves were turned into radioactive balls of glass. Period.
Period-smeriod, life is remarkably good and finding ways to hold on. It reclaims land that's been nuked, it recolonises after volcanoes wipe out an ecosystem and covers it in volcanic glass. All it takes if a few air-born lifeforms to come in and settle after the destruction,
Yes, and even granting the remarkable hardiness of life, it would still take millions of years, not just dozens, to bounce back from a global cataclysm like that. So Rush is right about the general principle but immensely off-base about the timing.
Yes, and even granting the remarkable hardiness of life, it would still take millions of years, not just dozens, to bounce back from a global cataclysm like that. So Rush is right about the general principle but immensely off-base about the timing.
I agree, a natural recovery would take quite literally forever.
However, an accelerated recovery...initiated by 24th-century technology...such as introduction of genetically-enhanced bacteria into the soil...building artificial aquifiers...and so on...
It's amazing what one can do.
Only arrogance would lead one to assume that one can truly destroy nature--permanently. The universe lives and breaths on a much vaster scale. We can't imagine its slow and powerful rhythms--and we haven't got the humility to try.
Even the Borg, with all its vast power and might, cannot permanently prevent nature from bounding back to full existence. Even if all the Borg's power were to be turned on a world--as what happened to Risa--life...would find a way.
Dude, there's nothing left. Star Trek established as far back as TOS that a Federation starship is capable of annihilating all life on a Class M planet and turning it into a ball of radioactive glass, and Destiny made it clear that the Borg more than share that capacity. When the Borg exterminate a planet, there's nothing left. Anywhere. The entire biosphere has been purged. There are no bacteria, no microbes, no fungi, no plants, no animals, no viruses, no DNA strands, no RNA strands, nothing.
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